Timeline extended for launch of Wilson Library facilities work.

Collection Number: 00760

Collection Title: James Webb Papers, 1725-1918

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held in the Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in our reading room, and not digitally available through the World Wide Web. See the Duplication Policy section for more information.


expand/collapse Expand/collapse Collection Overview

Size 16.0 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 10200 items)
Abstract James Webb (20 February 1774-17 February 1855), physician of Hillsborough, Orange County, N.C., a founder of the North Carolina State Medical Society, Presbyterian educational leader and philanthropist, merchant, and banker. Primarily business papers relating to banking and cotton manufacturing in North Carolina and mercantile business in North Carolina and Alabama. Papers include personal and business letters as well as financial and legal papers and account books of James Webb and of his family and business associates. Only a few items relate to Webb's medical practice. Many documents relate to Webb's business dealings with Osmond F. Long, Robert Dickins, David Yarbrough, Mary W. Burke, Archibald D. Murphey, and others. There are also many documents, 1815-1846, of Webb as agent of the Bank of Cape Fear at Hillsborough, N.C., and of Webb and Douglass and J. & J.H. Webb, partnerships of James Webb Junior, and John H. Webb, engaged in the milling and manufacturing of cotton textiles in the 1850s and early 1860s. Also included are Strudwick family papers, chiefly of Samuel Strudwick and his son William F. Strudwick; papers of Henry Neal, mostly related to Tennessee lands; letters and other items addressed to William Bond, a merchant of North Carolina and Tennessee; papers of the Burke, Doherty, and Yarbrough families of North Carolina and Alabama; and correspondence between Thomas H. Webb and Isabella Graham Webb.
Creator Webb, James, 1774-1855.
Curatorial Unit University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection.
Language English
Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Information For Users

Restrictions to Access
No restrictions. Open for research.
Restrictions to Use
No usage restrictions.
Copyright Notice
Copyright is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], in the James Webb Papers #760, Southern Historical Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Acquisitions Information
Received from the Misses Webb (Sarah F. Webb and unknown), Hillsborough, N. C., before 1940; volumes received from Orange County Commissioners; from James Webb Cheshire, Hillsborough, through Mrs. Alfred Engstrom, 1972-1973; from Joseph B. Martin, Charlotte, N. C., 1981; and from Nancy Webb in 2017 (Acc. 103308).
Sensitive Materials Statement
Manuscript collections and archival records may contain materials with sensitive or confidential information that is protected under federal or state right to privacy laws and regulations, the North Carolina Public Records Act (N.C.G.S. § 132 1 et seq.), and Article 7 of the North Carolina State Personnel Act (Privacy of State Employee Personnel Records, N.C.G.S. § 126-22 et seq.). Researchers are advised that the disclosure of certain information pertaining to identifiable living individuals represented in this collection without the consent of those individuals may have legal ramifications (e.g., a cause of action under common law for invasion of privacy may arise if facts concerning an individual's private life are published that would be deemed highly offensive to a reasonable person) for which the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill assumes no responsibility.
Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Processing Information

Processed by: Jeff Richardson, August 1995

Encoded by: ByteManagers Inc., 2008

This collection was processed with support, in part, from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Division of Preservation and Access.

Updated by: Jodi Berkowitz, 2018

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subject Headings

The following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.

Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Related Collections

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Biographical Information

James Webb (20 February 1774-17 February 1855) was a physician in Hillsborough, N.C., a founder of the North Carolina State Medical Society, Presbyterian educational leader and philanthropist, merchant, and banker. He was born at Tally-Ho, Granville County, N.C., the second child and eldest son of the ten children of William (1745-1809) and Frances (Fannie) Young Webb (died 1810), and the grandson of James (1705-1771) and Mary Edmondson Webb (1712-1795) of South Farnham Parish, Essex County, Va.

Webb attended the University of North Carolina, 1795-1796. In 1798, he enrolled in a medical course at the University of Pennsylvania under Benjamin Rush, and established himself as a physician and merchant in the town of Hillsborough in the closing years of the eighteenth century.

On 26 January 1807, in preparation for his coming marriage, Webb bought from James Phillips the five lots on the north side of E. Queen Street in Hillsborough--three lots where there stood an old inn that he evidently converted gradually into a house, and two lots on the south side of E. Queen Street, one where he built his office and dispensary (with a saddler's shop just above it) and a barn lot.

In the late autumn of 1799, Webb was a principal figure in the establishment of the North Carolina State Medical Society, which met in Raleigh on 17 December for its organizational meeting. Webb was elected vice-president and was also appointed a member of the Board of Censors, established to examine and accredit would-be doctors. At the Society's second meeting on 1 December 1800, Webb read a paper on the causes and prevention of gout and rheumatism. The State Medical Society ceased to exist after only five years. When Webb's ward and best-known medical student, Edmund Charles Fox Strudwick, revived the medical society in 1845 and was made its president, the 75-year-old Webb was made an honorary charter member.

The numerous students who came to Hillsborough to study medicine with Webb included Edmund C. F. Strudwick, William Webb, Henry Young Webb, Walter A. Norwood, Thomas H. Turner, H. O. W. Hooker, J. E. Williamson, Thompson N. Johnston, George H. Mitchell, and probably Johnston D. Jones and L. D. Schoolfield.

As early as 1804, Webb took an interest in education in Hillsborough. On 13 December 1804, Webb, as trustee, signed advertisements in the Raleigh Register for the Hillsborough Academy under Richard Henderson. He was still a member of its Board of Trustees in 1839, when William James Bingham was principal. In addition, Webb served as guardian for boys attending the Hillsborough Academy, many of whom boarded in his own home and for whom he sometimes became financially responsible.

Webb also initiated and underwrote two schools in Hillsborough--Mary W. (Polly) Burke's School and the Burwell Female School. In 1817, he erected a log schoolhouse in which Polly Burke conducted a day school for his children and those of his neighbors. This school continued until 1834. In 1837, Webb suggested to Mrs. M. A. Burwell that she teach his daughter Mary and two other Presbyterian girls. The new Burwell Female School, which replaced Miss Burke's School and provided an additional four-year curriculum for older girls, operated from 1837 to 1857, with Webb always listed as its patron. In 1825, Webb was also the president of the Orange County Sunday School Union, which petitioned unsuccessfully to gain state support for 22 Sunday schools to teach poor and indigent children to read and write.

Webb was a trustee of the University of North Carolina for 38 years, from 1812 to 1850. In 1827, he served on the University's Board of Visitors and, in 1830, on an emergency committee to help restore the University to a sound financial basis after the Panic of 1825.

Although only his wife, Annie Alves Huske Webb, was formally listed in 1816 as one of the nine organizers of the new Hillsborough Presbyterian Church, Webb signed the first pew rental lists on 20 September 1816 and, over a period of years, made large contributions to the Reverend John Knox Witherspoon's salary and to other church expenses. In 1835, Webb took in his own name a 99-year lease on a lot, where he erected a frame Sessions House with bell tower, used as a Presbyterian Sunday school room and eventually, until 1934, as a public library. He also served as a Presbyterian elder from 1835 until his death in 1855.

In 1822, Webb provided the trustees of the Methodist congregation with money and lumber to erect the first Methodist Church in Hillsborough on one of his lots. A paper, written in 1832 by Joseph B. Bacon, a Methodist trustee, mentions in considerable detail the indebtedness of the church to Webb, noting his many gifts and loans "and that he has waited patiently Ten years for the money that we still owe him."

Like most early doctors, Webb necessarily supplemented his uncertain income from the medical profession in other ways; his mercantile and medical careers ran concurrently until the end of his life. From 1799 to 1801 or a little later, Webb may have been a silent partner in the Hillsborough store of the successful Raleigh mercantile firm of Southey and William Bond. He was also the major partner for several years with his brother Thomas in James Webb & Co., a mercantile establishment near their father's home in Granville County. For two and a half years, from 1 January 1805 to 1 July 1807, Webb served as postmaster of Hillsborough.

Webb's mercantile undertakings also included a general store and lumberyard, later known as Webb, Long & Co., in which his son-in-law Dr. Osmond F. Long was a partner, and a sizable brickyard, Webb & Hancock, operating near the Eno River. He entered into brief partnerships with various fellow townsmen on occasion (e.g., with J. J. Freeland under the name Webb & Freeland). A sideline that almost amounted to a business with both Webb and Judge Thomas Ruffin was the hiring out on an annual basis of the slaves of widows and of ailing or absent owners. Webb also served as Clerk and Master in Equity in scores of estate settlements and as the executor of innumerable Hillsborough and Orange County wills.

In 1815, Webb was appointed Hillsborough agent (cashier) of the Bank of the Cape Fear, a post he held until the closing of the office in 1846. The Bank's Hillsborough branch was staffed by five directors in addition to the agent.

On 1 November 1842, James Webb was declared bankrupt and, on 11 December, his possessions were sold at public auction.

On 12 February 1807, Webb married Annie Alves Huske (13 January 1785-23 June 1852), daughter of Englishman John Huske (died 1792) and Elizabeth (Betsy) Hogg (died 1788), and the granddaughter of Scottish merchant James Hogg (died 1805) and Elizabeth McDowell Alves (died 1801). Ten children, nine of whom survived, were born to the Webbs: Henry Young, Frances Helen, Elizabeth, Ann (Annie), James, William (who died at age 2), John Huske, Mary, William, and Thomas. Two of the sons, Henry Young and William, became physicians; James Junior, became a merchant in Hillsborough. Annie Alves Huske Webb died in 1852 and Webb died three years later at the age of 81 years. Both were buried in the Webb-Long plot in Hillsborough's Old Town Cemetery.

[Adapted from "James Webb," by Mary Claire Engstrom, in William S. Powell, ed., Dictionary of North Carolina Biography (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2000).]

Thomas H. Webb (1871-1939), son of Robina and Thomas Webb, the youngest son of Dr. James and Annie Alves Huske Webb, worked at Cooleemee Cotton Mills. He married Isabella Graham circa 1895.

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Scope and Content

Primarily J.H. Webb's business papers relating to banking and cotton manufacturing in North Carolina and mercantile business in North Carolina and Alabama. Papers include personal and business letters as well as financial and legal papers and account books of James Webb and of his family and business associates. Only a few items relate to Webb's medical practice. Many documents relate to Webb's business dealings with Osmond F. Long, Robert Dickins, David Yarbrough, Mary W. Burke, Archibald D. Murphey, and others. There are also many documents, 1815-1846, of Webb as agent of the Bank of Cape Fear at Hillsborough, N.C., and of Webb and Douglass and J. & J.H. Webb, partnerships of James Webb Junior, and John H. Webb, engaged in the milling and manufacturing of cotton textiles in the 1850s and early 1860s. Also included are Strudwick family papers, chiefly of Samuel Strudwick and his son William F. Strudwick; papers of Henry Neal, mostly related to Tennessee lands; letters and other items addressed to William Bond, a merchant of North Carolina and Tennessee; and papers of the Burke, Doherty, and Yarbrough families of North Carolina and Alabama. The Addition of 2018 (Acc. 103308) consists of correspondence between Thomas H. Webb (1871-1939) and Isabella Graham Webb before they were married (1894-1895) and after (1899-1901).

Back to Top

Contents list

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series Quick Links

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 1. James Webb Papers, 1802-1849.

About 3,500 items.

Personal and business letters, financial and business papers, and legal documents of James Webb, and other materials related to various Webb business partnerships. There are very few items related to Webb's medical practice; most relate to his business activities or to family matters.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 1.1. Correspondence, 1802-1849.

About 500 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Letters, most to James Webb, about personal as well as business matters. Subseries 1.2. includes a number of letters of a transactional nature.

The earliest items date from 1802, shortly after James Webb arrived in Hillsborough from Granville County, N.C. These include letters from William Bond (see also Series 5) to Webb regarding purchases of goods for Bond's mercantile business and Webb's medical practice. Letters from Bond to Webb in 1803 describe the former's trip to New York to make purchases.

Included here are letters from Judge Archibald D. Murphey and Samuel Ashe in the late 1810s and early 1820s regarding Murphey's debt problems and numerous letters to Webb in the late 1820s regarding Murphey's lottery to finance his history of North Carolina (see also Series 1.2 for lottery-related correspondence).

Many letters to Webb concern real estate and other investments. James Phillips of Chapel Hill wrote Webb on 3 May 1833 asking his help in investing money Phillips might come into from time to time, as Webb was "the best person to apply to on such subjects." There are also several letters to Webb regarding real estate matters in Tennessee involving Henry Neal, Robert Dickins, and W. S. Webb (e.g., James W. Russell to Webb, 19 December 1829, and Thomas Washington to Webb, 28 September 1832).

Family correspondence includes letters in September and October 1823 informing Webb of the death of his brother Henry. Webb received a letter dated 16 May 1827 from William Raintree of Columbia, Tenn., informing him that Raintree had married Webb's ward Peggy Jane Ray on 3 May and apologizing for not involving him in the decision. W. S. Webb wrote his brother on 24 August 1827 with information regarding Webb's guardianship of Eliza Bond (William Bond's daughter). Webb's uncle Lewis Webb wrote him on 10 September 1832 regarding the settlement of Webb's father's estate.

In the 1830s, Webb received numerous letters from people who had moved from Hillsborough to Greensborough, Ala. Letters from Robert Dickins, Webb's partner in Dickins and Webb, in Greensborough, Ala., indicate his difficulty in raising money to repay loans made by Webb to Dickins and Webb. Webb's many relatives and friends in Greene County, Ala., corresponded with Webb regarding his business and lending in that part of the country. Included among their letters are letters from former Hillsborough teacher Polly Burke, who moved to Greensborough with her niece Eliza Mary Bond in 1834. On 31 July 1838, Burke sought Webb's help in her attempt to document the self-purchase of her slave Henry and, on 18 August 1839, asked his help in deterring Henry from his plans to migrate to Liberia, as "his mother is very anxious for his return [from Hillsborough] & greatly distressed at the idea of his going."

Letters to Webb during the early 1840s indicate the juggling of properties and debts to relieve his financial distress. Webb's nephews James and William Webb wrote that Webb must come personally to Alabama to dispose of Robert Dickins's property. Letters from Thomas Bennehan, Polly Burke, and William Cain concern his role as security of debts of David Yarbrough. Letters from sons-in-law Osmond F. Long and W. F. Strudwick also concern Webb's borrowing and lending.

A few letters discuss matters other than business. These include one from David Swain, 17 September 1844, about Governor Burke's papers; one from W. F. Strudwick, 8 February 1847, about Webb's illness; and one from J. B. G. Roulhac, 26 March 1847, about local fishing.

Other correspondents include Samuel Ashe; daughter Eliza Webb; William W. Raintree; James W. Russell; B. A. Barham; Thomas Washington; Willie P. Mangum; and Webb's business colleagues William Kirkland, William Lockhart, William Bond, and Southey Bond.

Folder 1

1802-1816

Folder 2

1817-1820

Folder 3

1821-1825

Folder 4

1826

Folder 5

1827

Folder 6

1828

Folder 7

1829

Folder 8

1830

Folder 9

1831

Folder 10

1832-1833

Folder 11

1834-1835

Folder 12

1836

Folder 13

1837

Folder 14

1838

Folder 15

1839

Folder 16

1840

Folder 17

1841

Folder 18

1842

Folder 19

1843

Folder 20

1844

Folder 21

1845-1846

Folder 22

1847-March 1849

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 1.2. Financial and Legal Papers, 1804-1850.

About 3,000 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Receipts, promissory notes, invoices, accounts current, brief letters relating to routine business transactions, deeds, articles of agreement, wills, inventories, powers of attorney, and other financial and legal papers. These documents show the variety of Webb's partnerships and activities. Documented are transactions with John Sutton; William Bond; William Kirkland; James Hogg; Childs & Alves; A. D. Murphey; Robert Dickins; Thomas Scott; Farrar & Webb; Webb & Yarbrough; Long, Webb & Co.; and others. Included is a receipt, 20 March 1830, from W. S. Bingham to James Webb for a telegraph bill.

Documents relating to various Webb partnerships are dated primarily between 1820 and 1840. Among these are papers:

1821-1838, relating to Webb & Dickins of Granville County, N.C., and the firm known as Robert Dickins & Co. or Dickins, Webb & Co., a general merchandising business in Greensboro, Ala.;

1820-1827, relating to a firm engaged in the tanning of leather, under the name Kirkland, Webb & Ruffin;

1825-1828, relating to Stebbins & Webb, a general merchandising firm in Hillsborough, N.C.;

1827-1830, relating to Webb & Miller, a grain-milling firm in Hillsborough, N.C., with William Miller as managing partner;

1827-1832, relating to Webb & Claytor, a lumber-milling firm in Hillsborough, N.C., with Samuel Claytor as managing partner and in which Moses McCown may also have been a partner; and 1831 and 1833, relating to the partnerships between James Webb and his son-in-law William F. Strudwick in general merchandise and cotton-milling in Hillsborough, N.C.

Also included are fragments of journals and account books, 1805-1850, primarily related to partnerships involving James Webb. Scattered documents throughout Series 1 hint at or refer to other Webb partnerships (e.g., Webb & Hancock [brickyard], Webb & Freeland, and James Webb & Co.).

Legal papers include deeds, articles of agreement, wills, inventories, deeds in trust, lists of property involved in legal affairs, powers of attorney, and other items. Found here are the wills of James Webb's father William Webb, 16 December 1809; of Ann Alves Huske Webb's uncle Gavin Alves, 3 January 1812; and of James Webb, 2 October 1838. There is also an agreement, 5 April 1825, between James Webb and Samuel Claytor concerning a smithy apprenticeship for Webb's slaves. Many items relate to the borrowing and lending of money. Of particular importance are two documents, dated 1842, in which James Webb put land, slaves, and other assets in trust, with O. F. Long as trustee, to be sold to pay Webb's creditors.

Folder 23

1804-1806

Folder 24

1808-1809

Folder 25

1810

Folder 26

1811-1813

Folder 27

1814

Folder 28

1815

Folder 29

1816

Folder 30

1817

Folder 31

1818

Folder 32

1819

Folder 33

1920

Folder 34

1821

Folder 35

1822

Folder 36

1823

Folder 37

1824

Folder 38-39

Folder 38

Folder 39

1825

Folder 40-41

Folder 40

Folder 41

1826

Folder 42-43

Folder 42

Folder 43

1827

Folder 44-45

Folder 44

Folder 45

1828

Folder 46-48

Folder 46

Folder 47

Folder 48

1829

Folder 49-50

Folder 49

Folder 50

1830

Folder 51-52

Folder 51

Folder 52

1831

Folder 53-54

Folder 53

Folder 54

1832

Folder 55-56

Folder 55

Folder 56

1833

Folder 57-58

Folder 57

Folder 58

1834

Folder 59

1835

Folder 60-61

Folder 60

Folder 61

1836

Folder 62-64

Folder 62

Folder 63

Folder 64

1837

Folder 65-67

Folder 65

Folder 66

Folder 67

1838

Folder 68-70

Folder 68

Folder 69

Folder 70

1839

Folder 71-73

Folder 71

Folder 72

Folder 73

1840

Folder 74-76

Folder 74

Folder 75

Folder 76

1841

Folder 77-79

Folder 77

Folder 78

Folder 79

1842

Folder 80-82

Folder 80

Folder 81

Folder 82

1843

Folder 83-85

Folder 83

Folder 84

Folder 85

1844

Folder 86-87

Folder 86

Folder 87

1845

Folder 88

1846

Folder 89-90

Folder 89

Folder 90

1847

Folder 91

1848

Folder 92

1849

Folder 93

1850

Folder 94-99

Folder 94

Folder 95

Folder 96

Folder 97

Folder 98

Folder 99

Undated

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 2. Bank of Cape Fear (Hillsborough Agency) Papers, 1815-1846.

About 2,500 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Documents received and generated by James Webb as agent of the Bank of Cape Fear at Hillsborough, N.C., from the time he was appointed early in 1815 until the closing of the office in 1846. Most of the documents are letters received by Webb from the Wilmington headquarters of the Bank or from other branches, chiefly the one in Raleigh. The remainder of the items are documents sent by other banks or merchant firms regarding their discounting of Bank of Cape Fear notes; letters received from borrowers or shareholders of the Bank; and items generated by James Webb from the Hillsborough branch, including lists of shareholders, lists of depositors and debtors, miscellaneous account records, and cancelled notes.

The earliest items relate to the establishment of the Hillsborough agency. The first official document is dated 21 June 1815 and details notes offered for accommodation at the bank during its first months of business. A July 1815 item lists subscribers to the stock of the branch at Hillsborough. Other documents primarily relate to routine transactions of the branch. There are several year-end accountings of debtors and stockholders of the branch.

Some items of note include a 30 November 1832 list of debts due the Bank of Cape Fear office at Hillsborough. John Hill, cashier of the Bank of Cape Fear at Wilmington sent Webb a letter dated 4 October 1834 announcing the removal of certain restrictions so that "as the business season advances you will be able to increase your debt by safe and punctual business paper." In the late 1830s, an increasing proportion of the correspondence refers to debt collection and renewal rather than new lending.

Letters in the 1840s suggest financial distress among debtors of the agency. A letter, 30 March 1840, sent by J. W. Norwood, a branch director, to James Webb while Webb was in Alabama, told Webb that "this part of the old North State [Yanceyville], has turned into a Mississippi, since you left. William McMurry of Person has blown out ...He has committed extensive forgeries, and among the rest the note to the Bank of Cape Fear is a forgery. Has run away ...The securities of McMurry are in a pitiable condition, the neighborhood is overwhelmed with distress and ruin. And they are running off their property as fast as possible."

Many letters relate to Webb's bankruptcy, his indebtedness to the bank, and his obligation to the bank as a result of his endorsements of the debts of others. A letter, 22 May 1845, about the liquidation of the Hillsborough branch, from John Hill to Webb, states, "It is the wish of our stockholders that the Hillsboro Branch should be wound up & its remaining debts transferred with the time originally stipulated, 1 Jany, 1846 ... Call in your debt as fast as may be without producing embarrassment & distress." Winding up the branch's affairs took a bit longer than anticipated, for Hill wrote Webb on 1 January 1846 that "we suppose in less than three months the whole (except the deranged) debt will have been transferred, & little will then remain to be done ... we will send Up some one to settle with you & close the agency." As of 28 May 1846, Webb was reappointed agent, "ltd. to winding up the branch."

Folder 100

1815-1816

Folder 101

1817-1819

Folder 102

1820-1821

Folder 103

1822-1823

Folder 104

1824-1825

Folder 105

1826-1827

Folder 106

1828-1829

Folder 107

January-June 1830

Folder 108

July-December 1830

Folder 109

January-June 1831

Folder 110

July-December 1831

Folder 111

January-June 1832

Folder 112

July-December 1832

Folder 113

January-June 1833

Folder 114

July-December 1833

Folder 115

January-June 1834

Folder 116

July-December 1834

Folder 117

January-June 1835

Folder 118

July-December 1835

Folder 119

January-June 1836

Folder 120

July-December 1836

Folder 121

January-April 1837

Folder 122

May-August 1837

Folder 123

September-December 1837

Folder 124

January-March 1838

Folder 125

April-June 1838

Folder 126

July-September 1838

Folder 127

October-December 1838

Folder 128

January-March 1839

Folder 129

April-June 1839

Folder 130

July-September 1839

Folder 131

October-December 1839

Folder 132

January-March 1840

Folder 133

April-June 1840

Folder 134

July-September 1840

Folder 135

October-December 1840

Folder 136

January-April 1841

Folder 137

May-October 1841

Folder 138

November-December 1841

Folder 139

January-February 1842

Folder 140

March-April 1842

Folder 141

May-June 1842

Folder 142

July-September 1842

Folder 143

October-December 1842

Folder 144

January-March 1843

Folder 145

April-June 1843

Folder 146

July-September 1843

Folder 147

October-December 1843

Folder 148

January-March 1844

Folder 149

April-June 1844

Folder 150

July-October 1844

Folder 151

November-December 1844

Folder 152

January-April 1845

Folder 153

May-August 1845

Folder 154

September-December 1845

Folder 155

January-March 1846

Folder 156

April-June 1846

Folder 157

July-December 1846

Folder 158-159

Folder 158

Folder 159

Undated

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 3. John H. Webb and James Webb Junior, Papers, 1850-1863.

About 1,500 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Papers of John H. Webb and James Webb Junior, sons of James Webb. The bulk of these papers are related to their business partnerships. Most items from 1850 to 1858 are connected with John H. Webb's partnership Webb & Douglass. Items from 1859 to 1863 primarily relate to the brothers' partnership J. & J. H. Webb, the successor firm to Webb & Douglass. Webb &Douglass operated in Hillsborough until sometime in 1852; letters after that date to both firms were addressed to Orange Factory, N.C.

Both Webb and Douglass and J. & J. H. Webb were engaged in the milling and manufacturing of cotton textiles. These papers show an almost continuous view of the operations of an antebellum southern textile concern, as there are seldom gaps of more than two or three days in the documentation.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 3.1. Webb & Douglass Papers, 1850-1858.

About 750 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Letters and financial papers relating to John H. Webb and to his partnership with Colonel John C. Douglass in the textile milling and manufacturing firm of Webb and Douglass. The earliest letter is from Robert L. Martin to Messrs. Webb & Douglass, 10 July 1851, regarding the firm's purchase of machinery, including cards, bobbins, belts, spindles. Later letters concern selling cotton yarn and hiring labor. Financial papers of the firm Webb & Douglass and John H. Webb include short letters regarding routine business transactions, invoices, receipts, accounts current, and other items.

Please note that items dated 1851 may be filed as 1857 and vice versa, since it is difficult to distinguish between the two dates as they appear in these papers.

One of the few items regarding slaves is a letter, dated 28 July 1851, from Archibald Borland to John Webb complaining of Douglass's unjustified ill-treatment of Borland's slave Sam. He states "douglass had no right to whip him if he was gilty I dont blame him. I dont want him abused with out a case. I hired him to you and I want you to see Justice done him. I dont blame him to come and See me. Mr. douglass he sayes threatend whip him if he did if he loses the time I will make it up."

Folder 160

1850

Folder 161-162

Folder 161

Folder 162

1851

Folder 163-164

Folder 163

Folder 164

1852

Folder 165-167

Folder 165

Folder 166

Folder 167

1853

Folder 168-170

Folder 168

Folder 169

Folder 170

1854

Folder 171-173

Folder 171

Folder 172

Folder 173

1855

Folder 174-175

Folder 174

Folder 175

1856

Folder 176-178

Folder 176

Folder 177

Folder 178

1857

Folder 179

1858

Folder 180

Undated

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 3.2. J. & J. H. Webb Papers, 1858-1863.

About 750 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Papers of J. & J. H. Webb, the successor firm to Webb & Douglass, and, to a lesser extent, the papers of brothers John H. and James Webb Junior, that may provide particular insights into the operation of a textile manufacturing concern during the Civil War. There are very few breaks in documentation of more than a few days before the end of 1862.

Most of the items are short letters regarding routine business transactions, invoices, receipts, and accounts current.

The first letter is dated 1 January 1859, although there are scattered financial papers mentioning the firm J. & J. H. Webb dating back to October of the previous year. Letters about selling textile machinery indicate that in addition to textile manufacturing the firm was also a broker of textile milling machinery.

With the outbreak of war in April 1861, J. & J. H. Webb shifted some of their productive capacity to the manufacture of wool. Several letters in December 1862 and January 1863 concern selling the factory. Included is a letter, dated 30 December 1862, from G. W. Swepson stating, "I see you offer for sale your Factory. Please give me your price, &c., for it. I want to invest about Fifteen Thousand dollars of North Carolina Bank Notes in Cotton Yarns." The firm appears to have stopped operations sometime around the middle of 1863. The last several letters indicate that business was being conducted on a barter basis. One customer, in a letter dated 10 April 1863, indicated that he understood that cotton could only be gotten "in exchange for wool, bacon &c" and added: "I have nothing of the kind."

Folder 181

1858

Folder 182-183

Folder 182

Folder 183

1859

Folder 184-188

Folder 184

Folder 185

Folder 186

Folder 187

Folder 188

1860

Folder 189-193

Folder 189

Folder 190

Folder 191

Folder 192

Folder 193

1861

Folder 194-197

Folder 194

Folder 195

Folder 196

Folder 197

1862

Folder 198

1863

Folder 199

Undated

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 4. Webb Family Papers, 1862-1918.

About 50 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Papers of various of James Webb's descendants. The earliest items are letters from J. C. Webb, son of James Webb Junior, of the 27th N.C. Infantry, Walker's Brigade, to his "Aunt Rob" (Robina Norwood Webb, wife of Thomas Webb and daughter-in-law of James Webb). In these three detailed letters, 1862-1864, J. C. Webb described meeting Belle Boyd, described the action of Cook's regiments at the battle of Antietam, defended the conduct of North Carolina troops at the Battle of Bristoe's Station from the attacks of Virginia newspapers, and related the awesome size of the Union army at Orange Courthouse. The remaining items include various wills, letters, and other papers, mostly belonging to the children of James Webb Junior.

Folder 200

1862-1879

Folder 201

1880-1918

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 5. Strudwick Family Papers, 1730-1839.

About 200 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Papers of the Strudwick family, primarily of Samuel Strudwick and his son William F. Strudwick. The earliest items in the series are deeds relating to property in Bath County, Va. Items from the 1780s include correspondence of Samuel Strudwick about his Stag Park plantation in New Hanover County, N.C., and his Hawfields plantation in Orange County, N.C. Also included are tax receipts, deeds, business correspondence, land surveys, and other letters from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, as well as accounts, receipts, and other items related to James Webb's guardianship of Martha Strudwick and William F. Strudwick Junior, the minor children of W. F. Strudwick Senior. There are also miscellaneous business letters, accounts, and receipts of and to Edmund and William F. Strudwick and William F. Strudwick #38; Co.

Folder 202

1730-1789

Folder 203

1790-1795

Folder 204

1800-1812

Folder 205

1821-1828

Folder 206

1829-1839

Folder 207

Undated

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 6. Henry Neal Papers, 1780-1834.

About 300 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Papers of Henry Neal, a Hillsborough, N.C., native, the bulk of which document negotiations, law suits, and other activities relating to Tennessee lands. Most of the pre-1800 items are deeds involving William Tyrrell; from 1801 to as late as 1834, when Webb was handling Neal's estate, Neal interests in Tennessee were mired in legal maneuvering. Documents show that at times these interests involved James Webb's brother W. S. Webb, Henry Neal's son Robert Neal, and Webb's Tennessee agent James Russell in negotiating and collecting activities in Tennessee.

Also included are papers deriving from James Webb's executorship of Henry Neal's estate. The majority of the items are financial, such as invoices and receipts.

Folder 208

1783-1801

Folder 209

1813-1821

Folder 210

1822-1823

Folder 211

January 1824-June 1826

Folder 212

July 1826-March 1834

Folder 213

Undated

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 7. William Bond Papers, 1790-1818, 1832.

About 1,000 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Letters and other items addressed to William Bond, the firm of Nelson & Bond, the firm of William and Southey Bond, and Bond's daughter Eliza. Bond was a merchant of coastal North Carolina (Washington and New Bern) who migrated to Hillsborough about 1800, and from there to Tennessee in 1813.

Many of the early items are letters from various Bond family members. The majority of the letters to William Bond are from Bond's brother Southey. On 30 September 1797, Southey invited William to join his business, writing: "I think you would do well to Quit business in Washington & Come & Join me in Newbern." William and Southey Bond went into business together in 1799 on an equal shares basis. In July 1800, new articles of agreement were signed between William and Southey Bond reestablishing their firm, still on equal shares, with William in Hillsborough and Southey in Raleigh. Documents such as a lengthy "Copies of the Bills sent to New York for Goods," dated 1 September 1804, provide an indication of the extent of business being done by William & Southey Bond. Other documents show that the Bonds purchased medical supplies for Webb free of commission (e.g., 19 May 1803; 26 November 1804; 8 and 12 December 1804). Webb, in return, sold a horse to William Bond on 7 April 1804.

Other correspondents of note, before Bond moved to Hillsborough in 1800, included Caleb Evans, John H. Howard, William Good, Francis Nelson, Joseph Nelson, John Devereux, Eli Smallwood, John Smallwood, William Edwards, Charles Smallwood, Nelson Delamar. Correspondents after 1800 included William Lockhart, Moses Jarvis, William Jackson, Samuel Thompson, David Yarbrough, John Latta, William Duffy, Thomas and James Campbell, James Ray, George Green, George Anderson, William Jackson, and William Duffy.

Most of the items dated from 1814 through 1818 are miscellaneous financial documents regarding the expenses of William Bond's daughter Eliza, paid variously by James Webb, her uncle David Yarbrough, or her aunt Polly Burke.

After Bond's death in 1819, it appears that Bond's estate was administered by James P. Peters in Tennessee and by J. P. Sneed, William Cain Junior, and James Webb in North Carolina. An August 1832 "Division of Estate" partitioned slaves held by the Bond estate among the Bond children.

Folder 214

1770-1797

Folder 215

1798-1799

Folder 216

January-June 1800

Folder 217

July-December 1800

Folder 218

January-June 1801

Folder 219

July-December 1801

Folder 220

January-June 1802

Folder 221

July-December 1802

Folder 222

January-June 1803

Folder 223

July-December 1803

Folder 224

January-June 1804

Folder 225

July-December 1804

Folder 226

January-June 1805

Folder 227

July-December 1805

Folder 228

January-June 1806

Folder 229

July-December 1806

Folder 230

1807

Folder 231

1808

Folder 232

1809-1813

Folder 233

1813-1818, 1832

Folder 234

Undated

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 8. Burke, Doherty, and David Yarbrough Papers, 1767-1834.

About 250 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Papers of the Burke, Doherty, and Yarbrough families, who moved from Hillsborough, N.C., to Greensborough and Marion, Ala., in the 1830s. The central figure of this series is Mary Williams "Polly" Burke, the daughter of Thomas Burke, an early governor of North Carolina. A few of Thomas Burke's papers remain in the Webb collection, but most of them were given by James Webb at Polly Burke's request and at the urging of Archibald D. Murphey and David L. Swain, to the North Carolina Historical Society.

This series also contains documents relating to George and Mary Doherty. Mary Doherty was Polly Burke's mother when her name was Mary Freeman Burke. She married George Doherty after Thomas Burke died. The Dohertys had two daughters--Frances Wilson Doherty, who married William Bond, and Helen Mason Doherty, who married David Yarbrough. Included among the Doherty documents is a petition, circa 1791, complaining that James Hogg, Burke's executor and guardian of Polly Burke, "has committed numberless Devastations on said Estate," and requesting that "the Guardianship may be wrested" from his hands. A 26 August 1793 copy of a letter from James Hogg accompanied money to pay for Major Doherty's care of Polly. Several items relate to George Doherty's estate. There are also receipts for payments made for Ester Doherty by James Webb between 1825 and 1827.

Papers of Polly Burke include several financial items, 1816-1821, paid by James Webb. After a gap of a few years, there are a few similar items and two letters from Webb's brother William in Harpeth, Tenn., about selling slaves belonging to Helen and Eliza Bond.

Also included are business papers of David Yarbrough, a merchant of Hillsborough who married Helen Doherty, Polly Burke's half sister. Yarbrough was a partner in Yarbrough Cain & Co. Along with James Webb, David Yarbrough was a trustee in Archibald D. Murphey's bankruptcy in 1821. The bulk of the Yarbrough papers cover the period from 1821 to 1830; there are very few items between 1813 and 1820. Most of the papers are routine business documents, such as receipts, invoices, and short business letters regarding particular transactions. There are no papers relating to non-business matters. Most of the lengthier letters are from Richard F. Yarbrough, a Fayetteville merchant, especially before 1825.

Folder 235

Burke, Thomas 1767-1789

Folder 236

Burke, Thomas Undated

Folder 237

Doherty 1791-1799

Folder 238

Doherty 1805-1810

Folder 239

Doherty 1825-1827

Folder 240

Burke, Mary W. (Polly) 1815-1818

Folder 241

Burke, Mary W. (Polly) 1828-1834

Folder 242

Yarbrough, David 1813-1820

Folder 243

Yarbrough, David 1821-1823

Folder 244

Yarbrough, David 1824

Folder 245

Yarbrough, David 1825

Folder 246

Yarbrough, David 1826

Folder 247

Yarbrough, David 1830

Folder 248

Yarbrough, David Undated

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 9. Other Papers, 1730-1848.

About 700 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Papers of other individuals, mostly financial and legal items, with no apparent connection to James Webb. Of particular note are a letter, 21 May 1828, from the Ralph Randolph Gurley of the American Colonization Society, Wash., to Reverend John Caldwell, Chapel Hill, about migration of slaves to Liberia, and the will of John Umstead, 23 January 1829, manumitting a slave and her children as soon after his death as possible, with proceeds of their labor to go to them in the interim.

Folder 249

1761-1769

Folder 250

1770-1779

Folder 251

1781-1788

Folder 252

1792-1799

Folder 253

1800-1803

Folder 254

1804-1812

Folder 255

1813-1819

Folder 256

1820-1821

Folder 257

1822-1825

Folder 258

1826-1829

Folder 259

1830-1835

Folder 260

1836-1838

Folder 261

1839-1848

Folder 262-264

Folder 262

Folder 263

Folder 264

Undated

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 10. Business Volumes, 1804-1883.

15 items.

Arrangement: chronological.

Volumes consist of ledgers; cotton mill accounts, 1842-63; and merchandise books of James Webb Junior, 1878-1883.

Folder 265

Volume 1: 1804. List of names and amounts of money (English).

Folder 266

Volume 2: 1810-1831. Day book and journal, William Webb's executors.

Folder 267

Volume 3: 1810-1831. Ledger, William Webb's executors.

Oversize Volume SV-760/4

Volume 4: 1827-1830. Ledger, William Miller (William Webb written on outside).

Folder 268

Folder number not used

Oversize Volume SV-760/5

Volume 5: 1831-1832. Ledger, William Miller.

Folder 269

Folder number not used

Folder 270

Volume 6a: 1832-1836. Cash book. Daily sales totals, etc., Hillsborough.

Folder 271

Volume 6b: 1855. Statement of John H. Webb, ex. of James Webb.

Folder 272

Volume 6c: 1873-1895. Estate of John W. Norwood. Statement of A. W. Graham, lawyer, for Webb heirs.

Folder 273

Volume 7: 1842-1853. Cotton mill accounts for batting, sheeting, osnaburg, etc. (previously listed as volume #2).

Oversize Volume SV-760/8

Volume 8: 1852-1863. Cotton mill accounts. List of Confederate States of America bonds bought (previously listed as volume #3).

Folder 274

Volume 9: 1872-1873. James Webb Junior, day book, general merchandise.

Oversize Volume SV-760/10

Volume 10: 1878. James Webb Junior & Brother, day book, general merchandise.

Folder 275

Volume 11: 1878-1879. James Webb Junior & Brother, day book, general merchandise.

Folder 276

Volume 12: 1881-1882. Webb, day book, merchandise.

Folder 277

Volume 13: 1882-1883. Webb, day book, merchandise.

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 11. Additions.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 11.1. Thomas H. Webb Correspondence (Addition of 2018), 1894-1901.

About 200 items.

Acquisitions Information: Accession 103308

Arrangement: chronological.

Papers consist of correspondence between Thomas H. Webb (1871-1939) and Isabella Graham Webb before (1894-1895) and after their wedding (1899-1901). Letters are mostly from Thomas Webb to Isabella Graham when he is in Tennessee and she is in Hillsboro, N.C. (1894), when he is in Hillsboro, N.C. at the Eno Cotton Mill and she is working at Presbyterian Hospital in Philadelphia, Pa. (1900), and from one to the other when he is in Cooleemee, N.C. and she is in Hillsboro, N.C. (1901). Additional letters present are to Thomas H. Webb from his mother, 1901.

Folder 278-281

Folder 278

Folder 279

Folder 280

Folder 281

1894

Folder 282

1895

Folder 283-287

Folder 283

Folder 284

Folder 285

Folder 286

Folder 287

1899

Folder 288-298

Folder 288

Folder 289

Folder 290

Folder 291

Folder 292

Folder 293

Folder 294

Folder 295

Folder 296

Folder 297

Folder 298

1900

Folder 299-311

Folder 299

Folder 300

Folder 301

Folder 302

Folder 303

Folder 304

Folder 305

Folder 306

Folder 307

Folder 308

Folder 309

Folder 310

Folder 311

1901

Back to Top

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Items Separated

Back to Top